MUSIC COMMUNICATION: WAYS OF REPRODUCTION AND CHANNELS OF PERCEPTION OF MUSIC (historical and analytical view)

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 53-61
Author(s):  
A. N. Yakoupov ◽  

In the article the means of musical communication and their evolution are considered in the historical and analytical aspect. There are two types of communication tools: acoustic, using the airspace as a channel for transmitting encoded information, and visual, which include stage design, allowing to perceive music as a kind of theatrical performance, and musical notation, graphically fixing all the components of the musical text. As the earliest means of nonwritten communication, the oral method is put forward, a vivid example of which is folklore, often called the musical memory of generations. Other examples of oral communication are cult music, improvisation and musical meditation. It is stated that musical writing, in particular, musical notation, and later printing tools have created conditions for overcoming spatial and temporal barriers to the spread of music. The next step is the invention of technical sound recording, which opened a new era in the development of communications. Magnetic recording of the visual series made it possible to create concert films and opera films. Even greater involvement of people in the process of musical communication was facilitated by the appearance of electronic and mechanical means of recording music. The emergence of new opportunities in the field of sound dynamics control, its timbre, influenced the development of musical thinking. A new industry of "production" has emerged with the involvement of professional musicians who own modern recording equipment and specialize in the production of "artificial" musical products. This process was accompanied by the formation of a new audience of listeners who preferred recording to live sound.

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-32
Author(s):  
A. N. Yakoupov ◽  

In the article the means of musical communication and their evolution are considered in the historical and analytical aspect. There are two types of communication tools: acoustic, using the airspace as a channel for transmitting encoded information, and visual, which include stage design, allowing to perceive music as a kind of theatrical performance, and musical notation, graphically fixing all the components of the musical text. As the earliest means of nonwritten communication, the oral method is put forward, a vivid example of which is folklore, often called the musical memory of generations. Other examples of oral communication are cult music, improvisation and musical meditation. It is stated that musical writing, in particular, musical notation, and later printing tools created conditions for overcoming spatial and temporal barriers to the spread of music. The next step is the invention of technical sound recording, which opened a new era in the development of communications. Magnetic recording of the visual series made it possible to create concert films and opera films. The emergence of electronic and mechanical means of music recording contributed significantly to greater involvement of people in the process of musical communication.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ching-I Lu ◽  
Margaret L. Greenwald ◽  
Yung-Yang Lin ◽  
Susan M. Bowyer

Temporal and spatial analyses of brain function with magnetoencephalography (MEG) are seldom reported in studies of musical sight-reading. We used MEG to compare the timing and localization of brain regions active during print-to-sound translation of musical notation versus English letters. MEG recordings were made on 22 professional musicians during print-to-sound tasks involving low versus high cognitive load. The MEG data were analyzed using MR-FOCUSS, a current density imaging technique. A laterality index was calculated to determine which hemisphere had more neural activation during these music and language reading tasks, and showed brain activation more lateralized to the language dominant (left) hemisphere in these right-handed musicians. Both note and letter reading tasks required translation to phonological codes and activated left hemisphere language areas. Also, the superior parietal cortex was a region of interest bilaterally. The high temporal resolution of MEG, coupled with its spatial resolution, proved sensitive to differences in cognitive load in reading both letters and musical notes. MEG will be useful in future studies of how brain structure or function may change as a result of learning music.


Author(s):  
Oksana Popova

The purpose of the article is to identify and analyze the leading directions in the development of stage design in modern domestic director's theater, as well as to explore the problem of director's search in stage design. Methodology. A systematic method was applied, aimed at theoretical and artistic, and practical comprehension of the main aspects of the process of solving a stage work in the complex of organizing stage action and stage space; the method of artistic-critical analysis in the process of studying the modern theatrical repertoire, made it possible to study the stage design of the domestic director's theater in the variety of its forms; the typological method, helped to systematize traditional and innovative approaches to the development and implementation of stage design, as well as to determine its features in modern Ukrainian theater; the method of figurative and stylistic analysis, thanks to which the specifics of the stage design of modern productions of Ukrainian theater directors have been identified and analyzed; the hermeneutic method helped to identify and interpret the meanings laid down by the director in the rhythm-chronotopic configuration of the stage design. Scientific novelty. The directing-staging and scenographic activity of the leading Ukrainian directors (B. Polishchuk, D. Kostyuminsky, S. Masloboyshchikova) has been investigated, the variable variety of approaches to solving stage design in modern Ukrainian drama theater has been revealed and their influence on the artistic structure of the performance has been characterized; the specifics of the design solution for a modern theatrical performance by Ukrainian stage designers, as well as production directors, have been determined. Сonclusions. The transformations of the functions and vocabulary of stage design in Ukrainian directing theater XXI century are directly related to changes in the visual aesthetics of modern theatrical art, the problems of interpretation of the literary source, and its stage embodiment. Taking over the functions of a theatrical artist, stage directors strive to create a unique author's environment for a dramatic situation, visualizing a literary text in the space-time continuum of presentation in accordance with the individual definition of the meaning of the production, in an effort to accurately illuminate their own concept. But in the production, carried out by theatrical artists, the dominant position is occupied by the image - the performance is a series of visual images, and visual symbols exert an emotional impact on the viewer, which is usually stronger than a dramatic text and acting.


Author(s):  
Dionysios Politis ◽  
Miltiadis Tsalighopoulos ◽  
Georgios Kyriafinis

Medical practice is extensively using monitoring devices that are more or less invasive and immersive. For aural and oral communication these could be hearing aids, prosthetics, cochlear implants or goggles detecting vestibular effects and vertigo. Recently, a wide variety of trendy mobile or wearable devices has been offered to the general public, provoking a frenzy for augmentation alongside the great expectations that the popularization of Brain Computer Interfaces has caused to both the consumer market and the scientific community. The use of bionic devices clinched with synapses of the nerves does not merely mingle input activity to brain activity, but also it provides a virtual channel for augmenting and manipulating speech communication, language communication and even further musical communication. The electromechanical parameters, the medical practices and the learning potential for this new world of augmented Human Computer Interaction platforms and devices are examined under the prism of audio communication.


Author(s):  
Dionysios Politis ◽  
Miltiadis Tsalighopoulos ◽  
Georgios Kyriafinis

Medical practice is extensively using monitoring devices that are more or less invasive and immersive. For aural and oral communication these could be hearing aids, prosthetics, cochlear implants, or goggles detecting vestibular effects and vertigo. Recently, a wide variety of trendy mobile or wearable devices has been offered to the general public, provoking a frenzy for augmentation alongside the great expectations that the popularization of brain-computer interfaces has caused to both the consumer market and the scientific community. The use of bionic devices clinched with synapses of the nerves does not merely mingle input activity to brain activity, but also it provides a virtual channel for augmenting and manipulating speech communication, language communication, and even further, musical communication. The electromechanical parameters, the medical practices, and the learning potential for this new world of augmented human-computer interaction platforms and devices are examined under the prism of audio communication.


Author(s):  
DEBORAH HOWARD

This chapter considers the role of music and dance in the definition of identity by families and individuals in Renaissance Venice, with particular reference to the use of domestic space for music-making. The integration of music into its social and architectural context is discussed in terms of the class identity of different groups. The contexts range from domestic entertainment to family festivities such as marriages. The chapter goes on to explore the kinds of music-making in different spaces in the Venetian dwelling, in terms of the size and loudness of the instrument; the type of music performed; and the size, function and decoration of the room. During the sixteenth century, increasingly specialised rooms were created for music-making, often linked to theatrical performance and/or dance. In parallel, the employment of professional musicians by elite families began to supersede amateur participation on important festive occasions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 35-46
Author(s):  
A. N. Yakoupov ◽  

The article analyzes the process of social and musical communication formation in Russia from the historical perspective. In practical and theoretical aspects the first attempts to manage social and musical life of the country are considered. Since 30s–40s of the XIXth century, concert societies of a communicative orientation are created in Russia. The first years of the second half of the XIXth century, associated with the development of democratic principles, are marked by a surge in the attention of professional musicians to social and communication processes in music and art in general. The formation of more mature public tastes and the emergence of new trends in the concert life of Russian cities stimulated the renewal of forms of social and musical communication, which required the training of specialists in the field of music education and enlightenment. The opening of conservatories in Saint Petersburg and Moscow created the necessary prerequisites for building a unified system providing not only the formation, but also the subsequent self-regulation of musical communication processes in society. At the beginning of the XXth century Russian National Conservatories played their role in the overall process as one of the effective models of the educational movement and as an example of practical implementation of the tasks of purposeful socio-cultural design in the sphere of functioning of musical art of high spiritual tradition.


Author(s):  
Oleg Kopeliuk

Background. Among the studies of the last five years we note scientific researches which reveal different phenomenological concepts in musicological discourse and reveal the final maximum of the phenomenological study of music essence. R. Kurenkova’s research is one of them, which explores the content of the phenomenological approach to the analysis of musical art works, and traces the analysis of the history and theory of the phenomenological method. In V. Sokolov’s work the attention is focused on the categories of musical thinking, which for the first time becomes the subject of methodologically advanced phenomenological analysis. A. Karipova traces the connection of musical phenomenology with E. Husserl’s temporal concept in her research. T. Ivannykov studies the phenomenon of guitar art. The phenomenology of style, which was first introduced into the scientific musicological circulation, is studied by the article’s author in the PhD research. Objectives. The article’s objective is to form a musicological discourse on the problems of musical phenomenology on the basis of existing scientific sources and to reveal the understanding of composer’s style as a phenomenon of musical creativity. Methods. The research methodology is focused on the synthesis of different approaches: historical, functional and structural, genre, stylistic performing and interpretive, phenomenological approaches. Results. Phenomenology as a direction studies phenomena, reveals their content by means of structural complexes in their integrity. In the 19th century, the search for common interconnection and common methods of a unified process of cognition began in Western European philosophy. The theoretical concepts of the leading philosophers and phenomenologists E. Husserl, F. Brentano, M. Heidegger are considered. Extrapolation of the teachings of outstanding philosophers and phenomenologists to the material of musical art proved that Phenomenology as a process of cognitive knowledge of musical creativity reveals the fact of an individual performer’s experience as well as the experience of his artifact, which at the final stage forms the result of theoretical understanding. The valuable concepts of phenomenology of musical creativity by L. Akopian, O. Losev, M. Arkadyev, Z. Fomin, R. Kurenkova, V. Sokol, O. Krayeva, A. Karipova, I. Konovalova, T. Ivanikov are considered, which determine the musicological debate and give perspective on this issue’s development. Music, as the comprehension of being, is an irrelevant form of its expression, it contains meanings that do not “lie” on the surface, requiring their understanding and recognition. Therefore, the phenomenological approach leads to the isolation of a special subject named “phenomenology of musical creativity”. Accordingly, the phenomenology of musical objects is a method of musical phenomena recognition defining the descriptive function of their essence. Since phenomenology is involved in musical creativity, it should be noted that it is connected with a created, completed and final product (work), its performer, and subject (listener). Therefore, phenomenology can be involved at all levels of musical communication: both external (genre, performer, listener) and internal (work, form, dramaturgy, style). Phenomenological approach to the study of the composer’s style specifics leads to a structured attitude to the content of musical phenomena. The broadest sense for the extrapolation of phenomenology to musical art gives the notion of life-creation, whose meaning implies not only an artist’s belonging to historical age and composing school. The phenomenology of composer’s style is connected with the knowledge of a work’s semantic orientation in its “performanceappropriate” style reproduction. The performance concept is an appropriate task of phenomenology in the sense of knowing the semantic direction and its performanceadequate reproduction that is personal interpretation. Thus, before performing the compositional structure of a work and type of musical dramaturgy, a performer should establish a research position. In order to develop a work’s phenomenological concept, it is suggested to consider all factors of composer’s style as a two-level system: general stylistic intonation and performing concept. Сonclusions. The actualisation of the phenomenological method of cognition is evidenced by the various positions (cognitive attitudes) that relate to the subject who is the subject of “composer – performer – researcher” creativity. The levels of manifestation of creative phenomenology are fixed in the artifacts (a composer’s musical archive, audio and video recordings of different performers) should allow to consider composer’s style through its evolution. The model of style phenomenology is built as a system of functional levels and connections between them that emerge on musical communication basis (author – performer – listener).


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Andy Bull ◽  
C. J. Criss

2020 ◽  
pp. 89-98
Author(s):  
Alla Sokolova

This paper aims to analyze the scientific works of leading British researchers to identify the origins of the stages of the formation of the English Masques genre, the influence of continental culture on the Masques genre, understanding the specific features of the first prototypes of the Masques, as well as the “early” Tudor Masques, including the Masques of the times of Henry VIII and Elizabeth І. Research methodology. Twenty-one publications by leading English scholars on this subject are considered, including archival data and historical choirs. The materials of the scientific literature are studied using logical, historical, chronological, problem-chronological and historical-retrospective methods. Results. It has been revealed that Masque is a musical-theatrical performance, a stylized hybrid, where acting, dancing, chorus, musical interlude, poetry, masquerade costume, and stage design are closely intertwined and interact with each other. The origins of English Masques date back to the folk traditions and customs of England, the traditions of Christmas or seasonal festivals, and the development and formation of Masques was influenced directly by Italian and French culture. However, the English Masques had specific genre peculiarities inherent in the exclusively English version of the musicaltheatrical performance. The masques become a key pastime in the Tudor royal court, where the royal court play an important role. Novelty. In this paper, an attempt has been made to comprehensively investigate the origins of the English Masque genre, as well as to characterize the influence of continental European culture on the development of early English Masques. The practical significance. The materials of this study can be used at lectures and seminars on the history of foreign culture, theory and history of culture in secondary and higher education institutions.


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